The present disclosure relates to patient airway positioning apparatuses for the head and neck which immobilize the head during medical procedures.
During procedures involving anesthesia, a patient's airway may become occluded, causing apnea. MAC (Monitored Anesthesia Care) is a type of anesthesia in which a patient is breathing on their own, without intubation. Normally during MAC anesthesia, the anesthesia provider must keep at least one hand on the patient's mandible to keep the airway patent (unobstructed); otherwise, the patient's airway will obstruct, which causes oxygen deprivation.
Devices that maintain an open airway, including specialized cervical collars and operating-table devices that hold the head and neck in rigid position, can interfere with medical procedures; some devices can compromise the cervical spine or result in spinal-cord damage during fast-paced emergency procedures.
A patient's trachea may become blocked by the slackened lower mandible. A manual method of holding a patient's mandible in a position that keeps the trachea open while the patient is immobilized is known as a jaw-thrust maneuver. It involves manipulating a patient's mandible to keep the trachea open while performing a medical procedure. The technique is used on patients in a supine position to open the patient's trachea. In this maneuver, a practitioner uses their thumbs to push the posterior of the mandible forward and into an open-airway position. As the mandible is displaced forward, it pulls the tongue forward and prevents it from occluding the entrance to the trachea. This helps establish a patent airway. The procedure can be problematic as it requires the provider to attempt to attend to more than one task at one time.
Among the sections of the human mandible, the inferior border is oriented at its base, below the body and in front of the angle of the ramus. This disclosure refers to the upper (outer) and lower (inner) inferior borders of a patient's mandible.
The disclosed embodiment is a wearable apparatus designed to assist an anesthesia provider in maintaining a patent airway on a patient in supine position. This allows the provider to perform other necessary tasks such as drawing up and administering medications and documenting during surgery.
The embodiment is substantially comprised of a mandible harness, straps and connecting rings. The mandible harness is designed to hold the patient in a “jaw-thrust” position. In an example embodiment a harness is constructed of common hardware and straps that surround the patient's head about the mandible. The harness has two curvilinear wedge forms shaped to hold the patient's mandible forward to provide access to the trachea. The two wedge forms curve and are contoured to meet the upper and lower areas of the inferior border of a patient's mandible. An example wedge form has at its top end a relatively high incline, and at its bottom end a relatively lower incline, with a concavity between, into which the patient's mandible rests. (The area of the mandible that rests in the concavity of the wedge forms is generally referred to as the inferior border.) The wedge forms are mounted to a cradle that is a flexible surface configured to extend from one side of a person's mandible to the opposite side. One skilled in the art understands that such contoured pads that make up the wedge forms and cradle may be constructed of foam padding such as polyurethane foam or of castable-elastomeric materials, and may be made in various sizes to fit various anatomies.
A rigid bar enables clamping of the apparatus to the operating table by use of standard clamps found on operating tables.
An adjustable strap, attached to the back of the cradle, extends on two sides of the patient's mandible to attach to a standard operating-table frame structure, to which it is tethered by a standard loop and D-ring connection or other buckle mechanism known in the art. The strap's length is adjustable on two sides through the aforementioned buckling means. An elastic-band portion of the strap absorbs movement of the patient's body during a surgical procedure. This elasticity keeps the head and spine in alignment and immovably secured so as to avoid spinal-cord injury.
The apparatus's parts are interchangeable and can be sanitized between uses.
In
These embodiments are exemplary and should not be construed as limiting.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63200191 | Feb 2021 | US |